Who the hell has dinner parties.. oh right.apeman wrote:Why is entertainment and radio a govt domain?
At a dinner party the other night I flippantly mentioned that our local library has mission creep (xbox games, thousands and thousands of movies/TV series, etc) and almost everyone was aghast at my comment.
I didn't even think that was controversial. Why is the govt in the free-rental video game business? Why is it govt's domain to ensure multiple copies of a billion seasons of sex in the city is available?
Strange how the overton window moved on this stuff, at my dinner party,, apparently anything less than having all media available for free at the library was cold hearted
How are xbox games and Sex in the City different from the billions of pages of books they currently have available? There's no shortage of trash novels in a library...
Pitch me an alternative for unbiased, semi-intelligent news from a commercial source. They will always cater to the lowest-common-denominator/consumer. NPR isn't much better, but it is a big step in the right direction.
Where do you get a variety like Prarie Home Companion, Celtic/Georgian/Bulgarian music shows, Wait-Wait-Don't-Tell-Me, and all the others? Even satellite radio has nothing close, other than BBC World - which is pretty much news only, and is also funded by a government.